This is not a finish and indepth list of all workers that fetch lawsuits versus their employers, but plainly a summary of the kinds of things that I have observed that prompted laborers to file a lawsuit. These are a lot of mutual reasons for why laborers sought to sue their employer or actually sued their employers:
1. Lack of clarity on what is expected from the employee. Many laborers quit and then sue their employers, because of a lack of clarity of what is expected from the employee. Employees seek legal counsel when the hours, the pay, the tasks, or other terms are unclear. They apparently feel exploited when the scope of their duties surpasses the expected values that were traditionalisti for the duration of the orientation.
Employers ought to be clear as to what is expected of laborers from the very beginning when the employment kinship is established. For a great deal of reason or other workers often times feel exploited when their expected values and actual duties are conflicting. Employee’s quitting or contemplating quitting many times seek legal advise when they feel they have been exploited, and even altho there might not be a basis for a lawsuit on the grounds that the employee feels exploited, a skilled attorney will recognise what questions to ask and a lawsuit may result.
2. Terminating a long term employee. Long term laborers many times seek legal counsel when they are terminated, no matter of what the reason is or even if there is no reason. Long term employee’s often feel the employer owes them for their long term dedication to the employer, and ofttimes they feel they have a right to the job. Generally there is no actionable cause of action versus the employer, when the employee is terminated, but if the employer failed to comply with all rules exceptionally rest periods, meal breaks, and over time pay, the employee would have a viable lawsuit. Termination of long term workers ought to be done with great caution, and the employer ought to make an crusade to end the kinship on good terms.
3. Money hungry employees. Employers must be very careful when selecting new laborers that give the impression they are cash hungry. Employees asking for raises, advances, or filing bankruptcy, or other than as supposed or expected indicating they are in need of money, often seek legal counsel shortly after they quit.
These are oftentimes the same type of workers that have a drinking problem or drug addiction. If the employer failed to document everything pertaining to meal breaks, rest periods, and actual hours worked a viable lawsuit might result. Money hungry laborers many times look to the legal system as a means of obtaining money.
4. Hiring workers as independent contractors. Most independent contractor agreements are not valid, because they lack something or because the employer is acting as an employer and the contractor acts as en employee. Employees must not use independent contractor agreements to hire employees. Independent contractors ought to be independent contractors and workers must be employees.
Using an independent contractor’s agreement is a problem that come back to hurt the employer. Depending on the circumstances the employer is not safe for with regards to four years after the fact.
There are also a heap of disfavors to the employee hired as independent contractor and as they try to remedy the disfavors they often seek legal counsel.
5. Over religious employees. Some over religious laborers ofttimes seek to advance their religious beliefs at each opportunity. This leads to troubles for employers, because religion inevitably involves potential liability for religious discrimination, it could be the religious advocate or it could be other employees. Employer’s ought to address the issue of religion and make inquiry as to whether there is a need to accommodate religious beliefs or practices.
This must be done very early on and there must be clarity so as to refrain from conflict amongst employees. The employer must be sensible as to religious views of all it is laborers and be sure to stay clear from any type of discrimination or perhaps even refrain from commenting on religion in the workplace to keep away from any type of conflict that could result in a lawsuit.
6. Mistreating employees. No one likes to be mistreated and maltreated laborers oftentimes seek legal counsel. Such things as bounced payroll checks, late payroll checks, bank fees on for cashing payroll checks, unauthorized payroll deductions, and other such things irritate laborers and many times the employee is right and the $5 dollar fee to cash a payroll check at the employer’s bank may turn into a $30,000 judgment versus the employer.
Employers are not required to be generous, but they are required to be fair. The Labor Code imposes a lot of requisites pertaining to fairness and at the minimal employer’s will have to cohere to the law to denigrate the number of potential lawsuits.
These are six reasons that why laborers are prompted to seek legal counsel from my firm which oftentimes leads to viable lawsuits. No one is immune from a lawsuit, but employers will have to be sensible to their actions and employee needs. The reason for the call to an attorney is commonly not the basis of a lawsuit, but is what initiates the contact with an attorney that many times results in a lawsuit.